A Seravue Financial Perspective for Today’s Retiree and Pre-Retiree
Many Canadians between the ages of 55 and 72, whether already retired or preparing for retirement, quietly worry about one of the biggest questions in retirement planning:
“Will I run out of money?”
It’s not just a financial question, it’s emotional. It touches on security, freedom, dignity, and the ability to live life on your terms.
At Seravue Financial, we don’t answer this with sound bites or sales talk. We address it with structure, experience, and a process that brings clarity and confidence.
Before we get into the details, it may help you understand how I address concerns of this nature.
After 40 years in financial services, I’ve learned that questions like “Will I run out of money?” deserve more than quick answers or generic advice. They require a thoughtful, methodical approach, one that respects the seriousness of the issue and the uniqueness of your situation.
I don’t “wing it,” and I don’t offer off-the-cuff opinions.
When someone brings me a concern, I use a structured process that looks at:
This is how we separate fear from reality.
This is how we replace anxiety with clarity.
This is how confidence is built, step by step.
The following framework is the same one I use with clients when we address any major financial concern.
1. What’s the real problem?
Often the issue isn’t how much money you have, it’s whether you have clarity about how long it will last and how it should be structured.
Most people aren’t running out of money.
They’re running out of certainty.
2. Are we contributing to the problem with our thinking?
Without a structured plan, fear fills in the blanks.
“What if the market drops?”
“What if I live too long?”
“What if expenses rise?”
These questions are normal, but unmanaged, they distort reality.
3. Are we misinformed?
Most people are operating with incomplete information:
Misinformation creates fear.
Accurate information creates calm.
4. How is the media influencing this?
The media rarely publishes calm, balanced explanations.
Fearful headlines get clicks.
Unbiased clarity does not.
Most headlines are based on worst-case scenarios, not balanced realities.
5. Has this happened before? Is it part of a cycle?
This fear is not new.
Every generation believes “this time is different,” yet history shows:
6. What research and resources do we rely on?
Your plan draws on real, evidence-based sources:
This is not guesswork.
It’s disciplined planning.
7. Wes’ experience with this question
I’ve answered this question hundreds of times.
Here’s the pattern I’ve seen:
People don’t fear running out of money.
They fear running out of choices.
When clients see their income mapped out, year by year, anxiety disappears.
Clarity changes everything.
8. If this resonates with you…
If what you’ve read reflects what you’ve been thinking or feeling, then you’re already on the right track.
Clarity begins the moment you realize you don’t have to navigate this alone.
9. The invitation
The best next step is to seek out an experienced professional who truly understands retirement planning. I encourage you to interview a couple of planners — take your time, and don’t commit to anyone until you’ve done so.
And may I suggest you make us one of those interviews… ideally, the last one.
When you compare the questions we ask, the structure we use, and the experience behind it, you’ll know you’ve done your due diligence.
If you feel we’re the right fit, then we can take the next step together.
Send us an email today to request a callback, or click here to book a time directly on my calendar.
This isn’t just the first step toward retiring with confidence; it’s also the chance to fix things that may need extra attention or have been neglected.
10. Final insight
Fear thrives in the unknown.
Confidence grows in the known.
Let’s turn your unknowns into knowns.
11. Watch out for biased or agenda-driven advice
Advertisers, the media, product manufacturers, government messaging, and even friends can give advice that is incomplete or not relevant to your life.
They may be partly right, but misapplied advice often leads to poor decisions.
Pause.
Check the facts.
Make sure the information fits your situation before reacting.
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